Part 21 (1/2)
I glanced at the roof and saw the hole the thing had made, edged by the ragged, broken s.h.i.+ngles that had been displaced when the machine broke through.
”There it goes,” said Gerald Sherwood, standing at my side. ”I wonder what it is.”
”I don't know,” I said. ”They slipped one over on me. They played me for a fool.”
I was shaken up and angry, and considerably ashamed. They had used me back there in that other world. They had fooled me into carrying back to my own world something they couldn't get there by themselves.
There was no way of knowing what it was meant to do, although in a little while, I feared, we would all find out.
Hiram turned to me in disgust and anger. ”You've done it now,” he blurted. ”Don't tell us you didn't mean to do it, don't pretend you don't know what it is. Whatever may be out there, you're hand in glove with them.”
I didn't try to answer him. There was no way I could.
Hiram took a step toward me.
”Cut it out!” cried Higgy. ”Don't lay a hand on him.”
”We ought to shake it out of him,” yelled Hiram. ”If we found out what it was, then we might be able...”
”I said cut it out,” said Higgy.
”I've had about enough of you,” I said to Hiram. ”I've had enough of you all your whole d.a.m.n life. All I want from you is that phone of mine. And I want it fast.”
”Why, you little squirt?” Hiram bellowed, and he took another step toward me.
Higgy hauled off and kicked him in the s.h.i.+n. ”G.o.d d.a.m.n it,” Higgy said, ”I said for you to stop it.”
Hiram jigged on one leg, lifting up the other so he could rub his s.h.i.+n.
”Mayor,” he complained, ”you shouldn't have done that.”
”Go and get him his phone,” Tom Preston said. ”Let him have it back. Then he can call them up and report how good a job he did.”
I wanted to clobber all three of them, especially Hiram and Tom Preston. But, of course, I knew I couldn't. Hiram had beaten me often enough when we were kids for me to know I couldn't.
Higgy grabbed hold of Hiram and tugged him toward the gate. Hiram limped a little as the mayor led him off. Tom Preston held the gate for them and then the three of them went stalking up the street, never looking back.
And now I noticed that the rest had left as well-all of them except Father Flanagan and Gerald Sherwood, and Nancy, standing on the porch. The priest was standing to one side and when I looked at him, he made an apologetic gesture.
”Don't blame them,” he said, ”for leaving. They were embarra.s.sed and uneasy. They took their chance to get away.”
”And you?” I asked. ”You're not embarra.s.sed?”
”Why, not at all,” he told me. ”Although I am a bit uneasy. The whole thing, I don't mind telling you, has a whiff of heresy about it.”
”Next,” I said, bitterly, ”you'll be telling me you think I told the truth.”
”I had my doubts,” he said, ”and I'm not entirely rid of them. But that hole in your roof is a powerful argument against wholesale scepticism. And I do not hold with the modern cynicism that seems so fas.h.i.+onable. There is still, I think, much room in the world today for a dash of mysticism.”
I could have told him it wasn't mysticism, that the other world had been a solid, factual world, that the stars and sun and moon had shown there, that I had walked its soil and drunk its water, that I had breathed its air and that even now I had its dirt beneath my fingernails from having dug a human skull from the slope above the stream.
”The others will be back,” said Father Flanagan. ”They had to get away for a little time to think, to get a chance to digest some of this evidence. It was too much to handle in one gulp.
They will be back, and so will I, but at the moment I have a ma.s.s to think of.”
A gang of boys came running down the street. They stopped a half a block away and pointed at the roof. They milled around and pushed one another playfully and hollered.
The first edge of the sun had come above the horizon and the trees were the burnished green of summer.
I gestured at the boys. ”The word has gotten out,” I said.
”In another thirty minutes we'll have everyone in town out in the street, gawking at the roof.”
17.
The crowd outside had grown.
No one was doing anything. They just stood there and looked gaping at the hole in the roof, and talking quietly among themselves-not screaming, not shouting, but talking, as if they knew something else was about to happen and were pa.s.sing away the time, waiting for it to happen. Sherwood kept pacing up and down the floor.
”Gibbs should be phoning soon,” he said. ”I don't know what has happened to him. He should have called by now.”
”Maybe,” Nancy said, ”he got held up-maybe his plane was late. Maybe there was trouble on the road.”
I stood at the window watching the crowd. I knew almost all of them. They were friends and neighbours and there was not a thing to stop them, if they wanted to, from coming up the walk and knocking at the door and coming in to see me.
But now, instead, they stood outside and watched and waited. It was, I thought, as if the house were a cage and I was some new, strange animal from some far-off land.
Twenty-four hours ago I had been another villager, a man who had lived and grown up with those people watching in the street. But now I was a freak, an oddity-perhaps, in the minds of some of them, a sinister figure that threatened, if not their lives, their comfort and their peace of mind.
For this village could never be the same again-and perhaps the world could never be the same again. For even if the barrier now should disappear and the Flowers withdraw their attention from our Earth, we still would have been shaken from the comfortable little rut which a.s.sumed that life as we knew it was the only kind of life and that our road of knowledge was the only one that was broad and straight and paved.
There had been ogres in the past, but finally the ogres had been banished. The trolls and ghouls and imps and all the others of the tribe had been pushed out of our lives, for they could survive only on the misty sh.o.r.es of ignorance and in the land of superst.i.tion. Now, I thought, we'd know an ignorance again (but a different kind of ignorance) and superst.i.tion; too, for superst.i.tion fed upon the lack of knowledge. With this hint of another world-even if its denizens should decide not to flaunt themselves, even if we should find a way to stop them-the trolls and ghouls and goblins would be back with us again. There'd be chimney corner gossip of this other place and a frantic, desperate search to rationalize the implied horror of its vast and unknown reaches, and out of this very search would rise a horror greater than any true other world could hold. We'd be afraid, as we had been before, of the darkness that lay beyond the little circle of our campfire.
There were more people in the Street; they kept coming all the time. There was Pappy Andrews, cracking his cane upon the sidewalk, and Grandma Jones, with her sunbonnet socked upon her head, and Charley Hutton, who owned the Happy Hollow tavern. Bill Donovan, the garbage man, was in the front ranks of the crowd, but I didn't see his wife, and I wondered if Myrt and Jake had come to get the kids. And just as big and mouthy as if he'd lived in Millville all his life and known these folks from babyhood, was Gabe Thomas, the trucker who, after me, had been the first man to find out about the barrier.
Someone stirred beside me and I saw that it was Nancy. I knew now that she had been standing there for some little time.
”Look at them,” I said. ”It's a holiday for them. Any minute now the parade will be along.”
”They're just ordinary people,” Nancy said. ”You can't expect too much of them. Brad, I'm afraid you do expect too much of them. You even expected that the men who were here would take what you told them at face value, immediately and unquestioningly.”
”Your father did,” I said.
”Father's different. He's not an ordinary man. And, besides, he had some prior knowledge, he had a little warning. He had one of those telephones. He knew a little bit about it.”
”Some,” I said. ”Not much.”